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Abstract

The first of two articles on bewitchment reports the findings of a qualitative study based on interviews
with a small sample of individuals who believed they had been bewitched. A phenomenological
analysis of the data provided a descriptive account of the psychic reality of bewitchment.
Those understanding their experience in this way attribute misfortune to the malicious intentions and
actions of hated others, who are believed to employ supernatural means to harm their ‘victims’, with
real symptomatic consequences. This supernatural interpretive framework relies on a discursive network
of witchcraft-related gossip, media reports, folklore, and diagnostic confirmation by traditional
healers. Bewitchment beliefs arise within a context of hostile and envious familial and social relations.
Despite the distress accompanying the experience of bewitchment, this supernatural understanding
was found to offer participants a meaningful explanation for negative life events, especially
during times of transition. Muti featured prominently in accounts of ways in which bewitchment is
effected and provides the grounds for the experience of being poisoned or possessed by an evil
entity. Treatment of bewitchment symptoms by sangomas and spiritual leaders is considered to be
superior to that offered by Western medicine.